EMPLOYERS REINSURANCE CO. v. Superior Court

74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 161 Cal. App. 4th 906
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 2008
DocketB200959
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733 (EMPLOYERS REINSURANCE CO. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EMPLOYERS REINSURANCE CO. v. Superior Court, 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 161 Cal. App. 4th 906 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

CROSKEY, J.

In this case, we consider the use of “course of performance” evidence in the interpretation of contracts of insurance and conclude that such evidence is relevant and may be used for such purpose. However, such evidence is only admissible when the performance was pursuant to the contract to be interpreted, not a subsequent settlement agreement such as the one we have in this case.

Thorpe Insulation Company (Thorpe), a distributor and installer of asbestos insulation products, was sued in numerous personal injury actions. Thorpe had many insurance policies, both primary and excess, issued by different insurance companies (the insurers). 1 Thorpe tendered the asbestos claims to the insurers, and there followed some 30 years of negotiations, settlement agreements, claims handling agreements, reservations of rights, and payments of defense costs and indemnity, resulting in the exhaustion or near exhaustion of Thorpe’s $180 million in insurance coverage. Nearly all of Thorpe’s insurance policies provided coverage for both “products” (or “completed operations”) claims and “non-products” (or “operations”) claims. 2 The individual policies’ aggregate limits of liability apply to products claims but not *912 non-products claims. In other words, non-products claims would not exhaust a policy. When the insurers paid Thorpe’s claims, they charged the payments against policy limits, treating all of the asbestos suits as products claims. When its policies were nearly exhausted, and asbestos suits continued to be filed against Thorpe, Thorpe brought the instant suit against its insurers, seeking declaratory relief that at least some of the current and future asbestos suits against it should be considered non-products claims. 3

The insurers took the position that, over the past 30 years, the parties had all assumed that asbestos claims were products claims which exhausted aggregate limits, and that, in fact, Thorpe had obtained millions of dollars in payments from its excess insurers based on this very assumption. Thorpe sought and obtained summary adjudication of the insurers’ affirmative defenses of waiver, estoppel, laches, and ratification. That ruling is not at issue in this writ proceeding. Thorpe also moved, in limine, to preclude the insurers from introducing the parties’ 30-year course of handling the asbestos claims as evidence of the meaning of the insurance policies. The trial court granted the motion, and the insurers sought writ review. We issued an order to show cause, 4 and now grant the petition in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

According to the operative complaint, Thorpe “is a California company that installed, repaired, maintained, removed and displaced asbestos materials at industrial facilities. It has been subject to thousands of asbestos bodily injury lawsuits resulting from these historical operations.” In the asbestos suits, the underlying plaintiffs “seek . . . recovery of damages from Thorpe resulting from their alleged injurious exposure to asbestos at industrial facilities serviced by Thorpe. The [underlying] plaintiffs seek recovery against Thorpe on various theories of recovery, including premises liability, negligence, and failure to warn.” In 1978, Thorpe began submitting asbestos claims to its primary insurers.

In 1984, Thorpe and 10 of its primary insurers entered into a claims handling and settlement agreement (the 1984 Agreement). The stated purpose of the 1984 Agreement was to “clarify among” the parties to the agreement the “apportionment of defense and indemnification of Thorpe . . . under any of the carriers’ policies arising out of numerous lawsuits charging Thorpe with liability for damages to individuals resulting from exposure to asbestos *913 products.” The 1984 Agreement states that it “is the result of a compromise accord and is a compromise settlement of disputed claims. It is the product of arms length negotiations, is not intended to nor shall it be construed as the admission of the existence of a policy or as a policy interpretation, and shall not be used in any Court or Arbitration to create, prove or interpret the obligations under general liability or other liability policies.” It further stated that “[i]t is the purpose of this Agreement to achieve, between Thorpe and its insurers, the most efficient and economical defense of Thorpe in such asbestos cases without prejudice to later assertion by any of such parties of claims against each other, or against third persons, pursuant to the several reservations of rights . . . contained in this Agreement.” The agreement allocated the costs of defense and indemnification among the insurers. It then provided, “Upon payment of policy limits or aggregate limits by any insurer that is a party to this Agreement, . . . Thorpe shall assume that particular insurer’s obligation under this Agreement,” with an express reservation of rights against any excess carrier or other primary carrier. The parties reserved all rights against each other, in the event it is ultimately determined by California case law or statute that the responsibility of insurers in asbestos cases shall be “determined on the manifestation, as distinguished from the exposure theory, or any other theory substantially different from the allocation theory of this Agreement.” 5 It appears that the 1984 Agreement was intended to be final with respect to the parties to the agreement, except in the event of a change in law. Finally, the 1984 Agreement provided that, except as expressly modified, “all terms and conditions of all policies written by the insurers for Thorpe remain in effect without alternation by this Agreement.”

The parties operated under the 1984 Agreement, with the primary insurers charging the asbestos claim costs against their aggregate policy limits. In other words, all of the asbestos claims were treated as products claims that exhausted the policies. As the primary policies were exhausted, Thorpe turned to its first layer of excess insurers for coverage.

In 1998, seven of Thorpe’s first level excess carriers entered into an interim excess insurance claims handling agreement (the 1998 Agreement). The excess carriers’ execution of the 1998 Agreement was intended “to adopt by way of compromise and accord without prejudice or waiver of their respective positions in this and other matters, an interim mechanism for allocating the responsibility for Defense Costs and Indemnity Payments.” Under the 1998 Agreement, each signatory excess insurer “expressly reserve[d] any rights and defenses that it may have against any person or entity that is or is not a Party to this Agreement with respect to any asbestos-related *914

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Bluebook (online)
74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 161 Cal. App. 4th 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employers-reinsurance-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-2008.